EEOC v. Honeybaked Ham

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Copies of decisions posted on this site have been downloaded from Westlaw with permission from West, a Thomson business. Page 1 Slip Copy, 2012 WL 5430974 (D.Colo.) (Cite as: 2012 WL 5430974 (D.Colo.))

Only the Westlaw citation is currently available. United States District Court, D. Colorado. EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION, Plaintiff, Wendy Cabrera, Intervenor Plaintiff, v. The ORIGINAL HONEYBAKED HAM COMPANY OF GEORGIA, INC., Defendant. Civil Action No. 11–cv–02560–MSK–MEH. Nov. 7, 2012. Iris Halpern, Sean William Ratliff, William Earl Moench, U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Denver, CO, for Plaintiff. Kent Edward Eichstadt, McCurdy & Eichstadt, PC, Centennial, CO, for Intervenor Plaintiff. Angelo Spinola, Benson Edward Pope, Littler Mendelson, PC, Atlanta, GA, Danielle L. Kitson, Katherine S. Dix, Littler Mendelson, PC, Denver, CO, for Defendant.

ment and retaliated against such employees when they complained about the harassment. In the present motion, Defendant seeks numerous categories of documents designed to examine the class members' damages—emotional and financial— as well as documents going to the credibility and bias of the class members. I will address each category below. I need to emphasize that it is my job to ensure production of documents that may lead to the discovery of admissible evidence. I am not determining what is admissible at trial. In addition, Defendant spends significant time addressing what the EEOC has and has not produced. As the EEOC demonstrates in its response brief, some of Defendant's representations in this regard are not accurate. Because of this, and because Defendant's requests are a significant (albeit, as I explain below, in certain respects justifiable) intrusion into the class member's semi-private lives, and because the whole area of social media presents thorny and novel issues with which courts are only now coming to grips, I will not determine this motion or any sanctions based on what should or should not have been provided prior to this Order, nor will I apportion fault in failing to produce documents or information prior to this Order. II. Analysis

ORDER ON MOTION TO COMPEL MICHAEL E. HEGARTY, United States Magistrate Judge. *1 Before the Court is Defendant HBH's Motion to Compel under Fed.R.Civ.P. 37 [filed September 6, 2012; docket # 177 (sealed docket # 172) ]. The motion is referred to this Court for disposition. (Docket # 173.) The matter is fully briefed, and on November 6, 2012, the Court held oral argument. For the reasons that follow, the Court grants in part and denies in part Defendant's motion. I. Background Plaintiff Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) brings claims of sexual harassment and hostile environment and retaliation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, alleging Defendant subjected a class of female employees (between 20 and 22 persons) to sexual harass-

A. Full Unredacted Social Media Content, Text Messages, Etc. Many of the class members have utilized electronic media to communicate—with one another or with their respective insider groups—information about their employment with/separation from Defendant HBH, this lawsuit, their thencontemporaneous emotional state, and other topics and content that Defendant contends may be admissible in this action. As a general matter, I view this content logically as though each class member had a file folder titled “Everything About Me,” which they have voluntarily shared with others. If there are documents in this folder that contain information that is relevant or may lead to the discovery of admissible evidence relating to this lawsuit, the presumption is that it should be produced. The fact that it exists in

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